Fredric March
23 titles
Filmography
23 results

Death Takes a Holiday
(1934)When the Grim Reaper goes on a three-day holiday, he takes the form of a visiting prince and falls for a woman who is both in love with life and infatuated with death.
The Adventures of Mark Twain
(1944)The life, love and genius of the United States' greatest novelist come to the screen in The Adventures of Mark Twain. Young, aspiring writer Samuel Langhorne Clemens hears the call of a riverboat hand sounding the water's depth "Mark Twain" and knows the pen name under which he will create some of the greatest works of English literature. From a frog-jumping contest that becomes his first short story, to his great American novel, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, which captures both the limitless American spirit and the dark underside to American society, Mark Twain's life and imagination amaze, entertain and inspire people across generations and around the world.

Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
(1931)An Oscar-winning portrayal of the Victorian scientist whose radical experiments with good and evil lead to a murderous rampage through the streets of London.

I Married a Witch
(1942)A 300-year-old witch wreaks havoc when she falls in love with a young politician.

So Ends Our Night
(1941)Wanted by the Nazis, a trio of Jewish and dissident refugees try to stay one step ahead of the Gestapo as they attempt to flee to safety.

Trade Winds
(1938)After committing murder, changing her identity and fleeing the country by sea, Kay develops a shipboard romance with the detective on her trail.
There Goes My Heart
(1938)Eager to break free of her constrained life, heiress Joan Butterfield (Virginia Bruce) runs away from her grandfather's yacht just as reporter Bill Spencer (Fredric March) arrives to get a rare photo of her. Befriended by the kind Peggy (Patsy Kelly), Joan takes an assumed name and moves in with Peggy, then joins her working at Butterfield's department store. Bill, who has begun an article on Joan, visits the store and, recognizing her there, realizes that he has stumbled upon a hot story.

The Buccaneer
(1938)A swashbuckling tale of the sea and the life and loves of the well-known pirate, Jean Lafitte. The film stars Fredric March as Lafitte, Franciska Gaal and Akim Tamiroff with Margot Grahame, Walter Brennan, Ian Keith, Spring Byington, Douglass Dumbrille, Beulah Bondi and Anthony Quinn in supporting roles.

The Best Years of Our Lives
(1946)Three World War II veterans—two bearing deep trauma—return to the American Midwest and find that they and their families have been forever changed.

Inherit the Wind
(1960)Opposing attorneys go head-to-head in a blistering courtroom battle when a Tennessee teacher is forced to defend himself for teaching Darwinism.

The Iceman Cometh
(1973)Considered the definitive film version of Eugene O'Neill's play, this simple tale of a birthday celebration at a saloon takes a devastating look at disillusionment and dashed hopes. Lee Marvin is haunting as Hickey, the madman that hides beneath the life of the party. John Frankenheimer's masterful interpretation stands as the single richest cinematic re-imagining of any American play.

Hombre
(1967)A white man raised by Apaches faces numerous challenges from bigoted passengers when outlaws ambush their stagecoach in this taut western drama.

Nothing Sacred
(1937)Una mujer se entera de que no se está muriendo de intoxicación por radiacion, pero finge estar enferma para aparecer en un reportaje.

A Star Is Born
(1937)Una joven llega a Hollywood con sueños de estrellato y solo los logra con la ayuda de un protagonista alcohólico cuyos mejores dÃas han quedado atrás.

We Live Again
(1934)Serving on a jury, a Russian nobleman tries to make amends when he discovers that the woman on trial is a peasant whom he seduced and abandoned.

Alexander the Great
(1956)Based on the exploits of the famed Greek, young Alexander III conquers the world and becomes one of the most legendary leaders in human history.
The Affairs of Cellini
(1934)Biography of Benevento Cellini, devil May Care prince of goldsmiths, lover and liars, set against the lush richness of the renaissance. Adult comedy.

The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit
(1956)The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit is the powerful story of postwar hopes and dreams, adapted from Sloan WilsonÂ's best-seller. Gregory Peck stars as a doting husband and father who gives up his small time job and enters the thrilling world of advertising in Manhattan.

Seven Days in May
(1964)Burt Lancaster and Kirk Douglas star in this thriller about a MarineCorps colonel who accidentally discovers a plot to take over thegovernment by a high-ranking general.

The Bridges at Toko-Ri
(1954)A conflicted Navy pilot and veteran of the Second World War questions the role he is forced to play when he is called back into service for the Korean War.